Homopurine deoxyribonucleoside phosphorothioates, as short as hexanucleotides and possessing all internucleotide linkages of RP configuration, form a triple helix with two RNA or 2′-OMe-RNA strands, with Watson-Crick and Hoogsteen complementarity. Melting temperature and fluorescence quenching experiments strongly suggest that the Hoogsteen RNA strand is parallel to the homopurine [RP-PS]-oligomer. Remarkably, these triplexes are thermally more stable than complexes formed by unmodified homopurine DNA molecules of the same sequence. The triplexes formed by phosphorothioate DNA dodecamers containing 4-6 dG residues are thermally stable at pH 7.4, although their stability increases significantly at pH 5.3. FTIR measurements suggest participation of the C2-carbonyl group of the pyrimidines in the stabilization of the triplex structure. Formation of triple-helix complexes with exogenously delivered PS-oligos may become useful for the reduction of RNA accessibility in vivo and, hence, selective suppression/inhibition of the translation process. © 2007 by the Biophysical Society.
CITATION STYLE
Guga, P., Boczkowska, M., Janicka, M., Maciaszek, A., Kuberski, S., & Stec, W. J. (2007). Unusual thermal stability of RNA/[RP-PS]-DNA/RNA triplexes containing a homopurine DNA strand. Biophysical Journal, 92(7), 2507–2515. https://doi.org/10.1529/biophysj.106.099283
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